The invention relates to a projection lens for use in an led module of a motor vehicle headlamp. The led module has a light source in the form of an led matrix including numerous led chips disposed in a matrix adjacent to and/or above one another, a primary lens including numerous primary lens elements disposed in a matrix adjacent to and/or above one another for bundling light emitted from the light source, and a projection lens. The projection lens projects a light exit surface of the primary lens to generate a predefined light distribution on a surface in front of the vehicle. The projection lens is designed such that it generates at least two separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens on its image side, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction.
|
17. A motor vehicle headlamp having an led module that includes a light source in the form of an led matrix having a plurality of led chips disposed in a matrix adjacent to one another, a primary lens including a plurality of primary lens elements disposed in a matrix adjacent to one another for bundling light emitted from the light source, and a projection lens that projects an exit surface of the primary lens in order to generate a predefined light distribution on a road surface in front of the vehicle, wherein the projection lens generates at least two separate images of the exit surface of the primary lens on an image side of the projection lens, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction, such that a superimposing of the generated images improves a homogeneity of the light distribution.
16. An led module for a motor vehicle headlamp, wherein the led module includes a light source in the form of an led matrix having a plurality of led chips disposed in a matrix adjacent to one another, a primary lens including a plurality of primary lens elements disposed in a matrix adjacent to one another for bundling light emitted from the light source, and a projection lens that projects a light exit surface of the primary lens in order to generate a predefined light distribution on a road surface in front of the vehicle, wherein the projection lens generates at least two separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens on an image side of the projection lens, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction, such that a superimposing of the generated images improves a homogeneity of the light distribution.
1. A projection lens for use in an led module in a motor vehicle headlamp, wherein the led module includes a light source in the form of an led matrix having a plurality of led chips disposed in a matrix adjacent to one another, a primary lens including a plurality of primary lens elements disposed in a matrix adjacent to one another for bundling light emitted from the light source, and a projection lens that projects a light exit surface of the primary lens in order to generate a predefined light distribution on a road surface in front of the vehicle, wherein the projection lens generates at least two separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens on an image side of the projection lens, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction, such that a superimposing of the generated images improves a homogeneity of the light distribution.
2. The projection lens as set forth in
3. The projection lens as set forth in
4. The projection lens as set forth in
5. The projection lens as set forth in
6. The projection lens as set forth in
7. The projection lens as set forth in
8. The projection lens as set forth in
9. The projection lens as set forth in
10. The projection lens as set forth in
11. The projection lens as set forth in
12. The projection lens as set forth in
13. The projection lens as set forth in
14. The projection lens as set forth in
15. The projection lens as set forth in
|
This application is based upon and claims priority to German Patent Application No. DE 102013217843.3 filed on Sep. 6, 2013.
1. Field of the invention
The present invention relates, generally, to motor vehicle headlamps and, more specifically, to a projection lens for use in an LED module of a motor vehicle headlamp
2. Description of he Related Art
Motor vehicle headlamps are well known in the related art. Conventional headlamps may include a light source in the form of an LED matrix, including numerous LED chips disposed in a matrix, adjacent to and/or above one another (also referred to as matrix headlamps). The LED matrix may include a single row or column having numerous LED chips, or of numerous rows or columns disposed above or adjacent to one another, each having numerous LED chips. Matrix headlamps generate a light distribution on a road surface in front of a motor vehicle, which has numerous sub-light distributions in the form of pixels or strips, disposed adjacent to or above one another. Each LED chip normally generates its own sub-light distribution. With a targeted activation, in particular an on/off switching or dimming of the individual LED chips of the matrix light source, it is possible to influence the shape and the intensity of the light distribution. In this way, a matrix headlamp can be used to generate an adaptive light distribution without moving parts. In particular, it is possible to generate a basic low beam light distribution having a horizontal light/dark border, a conventional low beam light distribution having an asymmetrical light/dark border, a high beam light distribution, a partial high beam light distribution in which targeted regions are removed from the light distribution where other road users have been detected, or a marker light distribution in which objects detected on the road surface in front of the vehicle are illuminated in a targeted way. Matrix headlamps are known in the prior art in different embodiments, such as in published application numbers EP2306073A2, EP2306074A2, EP2306075A2, and DE102008013603A1. Further, approaches specifically for so-called “strip-headlamps” are known in the prior art, such as in published application numbers DE102011077132A1 and DE102011077636A1, with which the generated light distribution includes numerous strip shaped sub-light distributions, disposed adjacent to one another. Approaches for designing a color-correcting projection lens for matrix headlamps are known from DE102010626B4. It is proposed in EP2280215A2 that the homogeneity and the resolution of the image be improved through the use of numerous LED modules in a headlamp. An individual projection lens (or secondary lens) is allocated to each primary lens, thereby necessitating that two light source modules, at least two primary lens modules, and at least two secondary lens modules be combined for the known headlamp. Thus, at least two light exit surfaces for each matrix headlamp are visible from the outside. A so-called “compound eye” headlamp module is obtained. The strip-shaped sub-light distributions projected onto the road surface have a relatively large angular width of at least 2° horizontally, or even significantly larger. The superimposing of wide strips of this type improves the homogeneity of the light distribution, but reduces the obtainable resolution. The known headlamp requires at least two complete light modules that are independent of one another for each headlamp, wherein each light module has an LED matrix, a primary lens and a secondary lens. Thus, a headlamp of this type includes at least two light sources, two primary lenses, and two secondary lenses. With all of the matrix headlamps known from the prior art, there is, however, the problem that there are color and intensity fluctuations in the resulting light distribution. These are caused mainly by the dispersion (a change in the refraction index for optical materials in relation to the light wavelengths) and imaging errors in the projection lens. The color fluctuations occur in particular at the edges of the individual sub-light distributions.
The present invention overcomes the disadvantages in the prior art in a matrix headlamp, or components thereof, with an LED module that has a light source in the form of an LED matrix, including numerous LED chips disposed in a matrix, adjacent to and/or above one another, a primary lens including numerous primary lens elements disposed in a matrix, adjacent to and/or above one another, for bundling light emitted from the light source, and the projection lens. The projection lens projects an exit surface of the primary lens for generating a predefined light distribution on a road surface in front of a vehicle.
The headlamp of the present invention exhibits an improved homogeneity in the resulting light distribution with a single primary lens and a single projection lens, wherein it may be visible from the outside that the light distribution exits the headlamp from a single light exit aperture, or from a single projection lens. It is proposed that the projection lens is designed such that it generates at least two separate images of the exit surface of the primary lens at its imaging side, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction, such that a superimposing of the generated images improves homogeneity of the light distribution. In this way, it is possible to generate the desired improved and more homogenous matrix light distribution with a single visible and accessible exit aperture (so-called monocular matrix headlamp). The proposed projection lens obtains a compensation for color effects and homogeneity or intensity fluctuations up to half of a pixel width, without the need for special glass materials or plastics, and without reducing the sharpness of the image, in particular the sharpness of the edges of the pixels. Thus, because of the proposed projection lens, an improvement in the color compensation and homogeneity can be obtained in a matrix headlamp, without forfeiting the sharpness (in particular, with respect to the periodically appearing color), homogeneity, and imaging errors.
Importantly, with a single matrix-type light source having a single integral primary lens disposed upstream thereof, the emitted light distribution on the light exit surface thereof is imaged onto the road surface with a single integral projection lens such that at least two separate primary lens images occur, such that in their interaction, pixel edges and border steepnesses remain intact and the remaining periodically occurring color and homogeneity or intensity fluctuations are compensated for reciprocally. It will be appreciated that there are various possibilities for designing the projection lens of the invention such that it generates the effects described above.
In order to obtain the projection lens of the present invention, it is conceivable to vary one or more of the active optically effective surfaces of the projection lens. In particular, these surfaces can be a light entry surface, a light exit surface, and/or any other surface lying therebetween (for example, with an achromatic lens). The active optically effective surfaces of the projection lens are preferably divided and/or displaced, such that the at least two separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, offset to one another in the horizontal direction, are generated. Each of the generated images contributes to a portion of the joint light flow, or a portion of the intensity and the illumination level. The portion contributed by each image depends on the number of separate images generated. Thus, the portion with two images is preferably 50%, and accordingly, with three images, is 33% of the overall value of the resulting light distribution.
Advantageously, the projection lens may be designed such that the separate images of the exit surface of the primary lens are each offset to one another by a value of b/n, wherein b is a width, in particular an angular width, of a pixel formed by the imaging of a single light exit surface of a single primary lens element, and n is a number of separate images of the exit surface of the primary lens generated by the projection lens. If the projection lens is designed, by way of example, for generating two separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, then these two images are preferably offset to one another by half of a pixel width. Accordingly, the images of the light exit surface of the primary lens are preferably offset to one another by one third of a pixel width if the projection lens is designed for generating three separate images. In this way, a particularly homogenous light distribution can be generated.
With a single matrix-type light source having a single integral primary lens disposed upstream thereof, the exit light distribution on the light exit surface thereof is imaged onto the road surface with a single integral projection lens such that at least two separate primary lens images are obtained, such that pixel edges and border steepnesses remain intact when they interact, and the remaining periodically occurring color and homogeneity or intensity fluctuations are compensated for reciprocally. There are various possibilities for designing the projection lens in accordance with the invention, such that it generates the effect described above.
In one embodiment of the present invention, it is proposed that the projection lens have at least two separate optical axes. The separate optical axes of the projection lens preferably run in the same horizontal plane. The horizontal plane preferably includes a module axis for an LED module, which is provided by the projection lens. The module axis preferably runs from the middle of the light exit surface of the primary lens in the direction of travel. The spacing of the optical axes to one another is relatively small. It is selected such that separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens are generated, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction by a fraction of a pixel. The different optical axes of the projection lens cause different images of the light exit surface of the primary lens to be generated. The number of separate images generated by the projection lens corresponds to the number of separate optical axes. The images of the light exit surface of the primary lens are offset to one another so to correspond to the courses of the optical axes. Because the optical axes run in the same horizontal plane, the separate images are offset to one another only in the horizontal direction. If the optical axes were disposed in different horizontal planes, then the images would also be offset to one another vertically.
In one embodiment of the invention, it is proposed that the separate optical axes of the projection lens run parallel and at a spacing to one another. Alternatively, it is proposed that the separate optical axes of the projection lens run at an angle to one another. In this case, the optical axes of the projection lens intersect, preferably in a plane of the light exit surface of the primary lens. The plane of the light exit surface preferably runs perpendicular to the horizontal plane, in which the optical axes are disposed. It is particularly preferred that the optical axes, which run at an angle to one another, intersect the light exit surface of the primary lens at a point of intersection for the module axis.
In one embodiment of the present invention, it is proposed that at least one active optical surface of the projection lens is provided with alternating optical regions for generating substantially identical images of the exit surface of the primary lens, which are disposed adjacent to, or above, one another, wherein a first group of the optical regions generates a first image of the exit surface of the primary lens, and at least one second group of optical regions generates at least one further image of the exit surface of the primary lens, wherein the generated images are disposed offset to one another in the horizontal direction in the resulting light distribution. In this way, at least one active optical surface of the projection lens can be provided with the alternating regions as strips or a checkerboard. An individual optical axis is allocated to each group of regions, which is separate from the optical axes of the other groups of regions.
Preferably, the alternating optical regions are formed on a light exit surface of the projection lens. It is further preferred that the alternating optical regions are designed as strips, wherein the strips extend vertically. If the projection lens generates two separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, the strip-shaped regions preferably alternate between two groups. Accordingly, if the projection lens generates three separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, then each third strip-shaped region is allocated to one of three groups.
It is further proposed that the active optical surface of the projection lens is provided with numerous prisms, extending over the entire surface, disposed adjacently to one another, the longitudinal axes of which run parallel to one another, wherein one prism surface of the prisms generates the first image of the exit surface of the primary lens, and the other prism surface of the prisms generates the second image of the exit surface of the primary lens. The prism surfaces can be designed such that they are flat or curved.
In one embodiment, an apex of the prisms is flattened off over the entire length thereof, such that a roof surface of the prism is obtained, which generates a further image of the light exit surface of the primary lens, which is offset in relation to the other two images in the horizontal direction. In this way, the projection lens can thus generate three separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, offset to one another in the horizontal direction. The images are preferably offset to one another by b/3, wherein b is the width, in particular an angular width, of a pixel in the resulting light distribution, thus a sub-image of a sub-light exit surface of a primary lens.
Further, it is proposed that the prism surfaces of the prisms are each divided into two sub-surfaces over their entire length, wherein a contact line of the sub-surfaces of a prism surface of a prism runs parallel to the longitudinal axis of the prism, wherein the sub-surfaces each generate a separate image of the light exit surface of the primary lens, disposed such that it is offset to the other images. In this way, the projection lens can thus generate, with a prism having apexes, four separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, offset to one another in the horizontal direction. With a prism having a flattened off apex and a roof surface, the projection lens can generate five separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens, offset to one another in the horizontal direction. The images are preferably offset to one another by w′/4, or w′/5 respectively, wherein w′ is the width, in particular an angular width, of a pixel of the resulting light distribution, thus a sub-image of a sub-light exit surface of a primary lens element.
It will be appreciated that other structures suitable for generating the separate images of the light exit surface of the primary lens can also be provided. Furthermore, it is conceivable to superimpose the structures for generating the separate images with an arbitrary diffusion structure.
Further, it is proposed that the alternating optical regions formed on the at least one active optical surface of the projection lens have an amplitude of less than 0.1 mm, preferably less than a small number of micrometers.
It will be appreciated that an LED module according to the invention can be obtained through the use of a projection lens according to the invention in an LED module for a motor vehicle headlamp. Likewise, a headlamp according to the invention can be obtained through the use of a projection lens according to the invention in a motor vehicle headlamp.
Other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be readily appreciated as the same becomes better understood after reading the subsequent description taken in connection with the accompanying drawing wherein:
In
A light module 6 is disposed in the interior of the headlamp housing 2. The light module 6 can serve to generate an arbitrary headlamp function or a portion thereof. In particular, the light module 6 can serve to generate a low beam light distribution, a high beam light distribution, a fog light distribution, or an arbitrary adaptive light distribution. Moreover, a further light module 7 can be disposed in the housing 2. This serves, by way of example, for generating a further headlamp function. It is also conceivably that the light modules 6, 7 could collectively generate a specific headlamp function. Thus, the light module 7 could, for example, generate a low beam basic light distribution having a relatively wide diffusion and a horizontal light/dark border. The light module 6 could then generate a low beam spot light distribution, which is relatively strongly concentrated in comparison with the low beam basic light distribution from the light module 7, and has an asymmetrical light/dark border at the top. A superimposing of the basic light distribution and the spot light distribution results in a conventional low beam light distribution. It is also conceivable that further light modules could be disposed in the headlamp housing 2 in addition to the light modules 6, 7. Furthermore, it is possible for only one light module to be disposed in the headlamp housing 2, for example, the light module 6 without the light module 7. Further, it is also possible that one or more lamp modules, such as the illustrated lamp module 8, could be disposed in the housing 2. By way of non-limiting example, the lamp module 8 may serve to generate an arbitrary lamp function, such as a blinker light, a navigation light, daytime running lights, and the like.
The light module 6 is advantageously designed as an LED module according to the present invention. The LED module 6 is shown in detail in
The headlamp 1 with the LED module 6 is referred to as a matrix headlamp, because it generates a light distribution with numerous pixel or strip shaped sub-light distributions disposed above and/or adjacent to one another. The individual sub-light distributions generated from the light of an LED 11 and the associated primary lens element 13 are also referred to as pixels. Each of the sub-light distributions is generated by imaging a sub-light exit surface of an individual primary lens element 13 of the primary lens 12 with the projection lens 16. A light distribution for a matrix headlamp 1 known from the prior art is shown by way of example in
With a targeted activation of the individual LED chips 11 in the LED matrix 12, it is possible to vary the resulting light distribution 20 in a number of different ways. As such, it is conceivable, for example, to temporarily shut off those LED chips 11 in the pixel region of the light distribution 20 in which other road users have been detected. In this way, it is possible to drive with a continuous high beam, wherein a blinding of other road users is prevented by locally removing the pixels 22, 23, 24 from the light distribution (so-called partial high beams). Likewise, it would be conceivable that the LED module 6 generates a low beam light distribution with an asymmetrical upper light/dark border, wherein the LED chips 11 for generating the upper row of pixels 22 are shut off, except for a few LED chips 11 for generating the pixels 22 on the side of the traffic in which the vehicle is located. Furthermore, it would be conceivable to turn on individual LED chips 11 in a targeted way for illuminating objects detected on a road surface in front of the motor vehicle, in order to generate one or more pixels 22, 23 above the light/dark border of the low beam light distribution, such that the objects detected on the road surface can be illuminated in a targeted way (so-called marking light or marker light). It will be appreciated that many other adaptive light distributions 20 can be obtained with targeted on/off switching and/or dimming of the LEDs 11.
In particular, along the edge of the individual pixels 22, 23, 24, the resulting light distribution 20 may exhibit an undesired color fringe. In addition, clearly visible intensity fluctuations may occur in the light distribution 20. With the present invention, the homogeneity of the light distribution 20 with respect to disruptive color effects and intensity fluctuations is to be improved.
The present invention proposes, in particular, a special homogenizing projection lens (or secondary lens) 16 as a component of a matrix headlamp 1 for motor vehicles, in which a light exit surface 17 of the primary lens 12 includes numerous pixel or strip shaped periodic structures, aligned in rows, which are projected with the special projection lens 16 onto the road surface in order to implement a dynamic low beam, partial high beam, matrix light or high beam light function. The projection lens 16 generates at least two separate images 25, 26 (compare
A first image 25 of the light exit surface 17 of the primary lens 12, which can be generated with the projection lens 16 of the present invention, is shown by way of example in
The intensity of the individual images 25, 26 depends on the lengths of the prism surfaces, or on the proportion of the prism base surface to which the corresponding prism surface is allocated. One embodiment of the present invention includes prisms having identical prism base surface proportions.
In order to illustrate the invention, reference is made to the light distributions 20, 27 shown in
An LED module 6 according to the invention, having a projection lens 16 according to the invention, is shown in detail in
It is not necessary that all of the active optical surfaces of the projection lens 16 are subjected to a division and/or displacement of the generated surfaces. It is sufficient if only one of these surfaces is formed in this way. This can be, for example, a light entry surface, a light exit surface, or a surface of the primary lens 16 disposed therebetween. At least one of the active optical surfaces of the projection lens 16, however, should be modified such that the at least two images 25, 26 of the light exit surface 17 of the primary lens 12 can be generated, which are offset to one another in the horizontal direction.
Another embodiment of an LED module 6 according to the invention, having two optical axes 43, 44 running at an angle to one another, is shown in
Another preferred embodiment of the projection lens 16 according to the invention is based on a special structure on one of the active optical surfaces of the projection lens 16. A corresponding embodiment is shown in
In
Another embodiment example of an LED module 6 according to the invention, or a projection lens 16, respectively, is shown in
The amplitudes of the prism structure on the light exit surface of the projection lens 16 in
Different design possibilities for the prism structure on the optically active surface of the projection lens 16 are proposed in
The prism structure in
It is conceivable to generate more than four images of the light exit surface 17 of the primary lens 12 with other designs for the prism structure. As such, it is conceivable, for example, that with the prism structure from
Further possible designs for the prism structure on the optically active surface of the projection lens 16 are depicted in
Based on the
The following relationship applies to the prism structure in
Furthermore, Snell's law applies:
From which, according to the conversion, and with nL=1 for air, the following is obtained:
sin ω=nPMMA·sin ε (2′)
Thus, for ω:
ω=arcsin(nPMMA·sin ε) (3)
And furthermore:
The angular difference thus needs to be ±¼ of a pixel width for two separate images 25, 26 of the light exit surface 17 of the primary lens 12, in order that the two images 25, 26 are offset to one another by ½ of a pixel width. Thus, from equation (4):
and after conversion:
from which the following is obtained
for α=ε:
From the equations (10) and (11):
Thus, for ½ pixel offsetting, the necessary prism height h is:
With a ½ pixel offsetting, the images 25, 26 are shifted in relation to one another by φ/2 (±φ/4). This relates to a so-called compensation of the first order. For a compensation of the second order, two double imaging groups need to be offset in relation to one another. In the following, it is explained how one can determine the height h of the prism for a compensation of the second order:
Thus, for the pixel height h:
With very small angles, the following applies:
Thus, for the compensation of the second order, the prism height h is:
Thus, for small angles, the compensation of the first order, second order, etc. needs to occur with triangular structures, which overlap, which have doubled, quadrupled, etc. wavelengths and the same amplitudes. A detail of a surface structure for an optically active surface of a projection lens 16 according to the invention is depicted in
The structure of the first order 50 generates two separate images 25, 26 of the light exit surface 17 of the primary lens 12, which are shifted by ½ of a pixel width in relation to one another. The prism structure of the second order 51 has a frequency of ½ (doubled period) and is frequently tilted at two of its flanks (prism surfaces) toward two adjacent flanks (one whole period) of the structure of the first order 50, and thus results in a shifting of the images in relation to one another by ¼ of a pixel width.
The prism structure 52 is the sum (resulting) from the prism structure of the first order 50 and the prism structure of the second order 51.
The amplitude h of the structure of the first order 50 relates to the necessary deflection angle of ±0.3°. With a period (wavelength w) of 2 mm and a refraction index nPMMA=1.49, and nLuft=1.0 [Luft: air], the prism height h is:
The calculated prism height h=10.7 μm is relatively large. For this reason, the wavelength 2, originally 2 mm, reduced by half to 1 mm. Thus, for the amplitude h of the prism structure:
The prism structure 51 is superimposed on the prism structure of the first order 50, but should only attain one half of the deflection (½*½ pixel→±0.15° H). Thus, from the equation (14):
Thus, the results from the equation (15) are confirmed. The prism structure of the second order 51 has the same amplitude h as the prism structure of the first order 50. In this way, it is also fundamentally possible to generate adaptations of higher orders.
The invention has been described in an illustrative manner. It is to be understood that the terminology which has been used is intended to be in the nature of words of description rather than of limitation. Many modifications and variations of the invention are possible in light of the above teachings. Therefore, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced other than as specifically described.
Licht, Martin, Stefanov, Emil P., Buchberger, Christian, Kiesel, Markus
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
10724699, | Aug 22 2018 | LUMILEDS HOLDING B V | Optical device |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
5772306, | Jun 12 1995 | Nippondenso Co., Ltd. | Illuminating device with a light distributing lens |
20100149801, | |||
20100188018, | |||
20150192264, | |||
20150226395, | |||
DE102007012023, | |||
DE102008005488, | |||
DE102008013603, | |||
DE102008030597, | |||
DE102010046626, | |||
DE102011077132, | |||
DE102011077636, | |||
EP2280215, | |||
EP2306073, | |||
EP2306074, | |||
EP2306075, | |||
EP2620695, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Sep 04 2014 | Automotive Lighting Reutlingen GmbH | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Sep 26 2014 | STEFANOV, EMIL P , DR | Automotive Lighting Reutlingen GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 034651 | /0442 | |
Sep 26 2014 | BUCHBERGER, CHRISTIAN, DR | Automotive Lighting Reutlingen GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 034651 | /0442 | |
Sep 26 2014 | KIESEL, MARKUS | Automotive Lighting Reutlingen GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 034651 | /0442 | |
Sep 26 2014 | LICHT, MARTIN | Automotive Lighting Reutlingen GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 034651 | /0442 | |
Dec 10 2019 | Automotive Lighting Reutlingen GmbH | MARELLI AUTOMOTIVE LIGHTING REUTLINGEN GERMANY GMBH | CHANGE OF NAME SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 059684 | /0522 |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Mar 17 2020 | M1551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Year, Large Entity. |
Jun 17 2024 | REM: Maintenance Fee Reminder Mailed. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Oct 25 2019 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Apr 25 2020 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Oct 25 2020 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Oct 25 2022 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Oct 25 2023 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Apr 25 2024 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Oct 25 2024 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Oct 25 2026 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Oct 25 2027 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Apr 25 2028 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Oct 25 2028 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Oct 25 2030 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |